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London court approves UK's Thames Water Debt Lifeline

London court approves UK's Thames Water Debt Lifeline

The court approved a debt relief of 3 billion pounds ($3.8 billion), preventing the nationalisation of Britain's largest water provider in the short-term and giving the company time to fix its finances.

The government is ready to place Thames Water in special administration. Thames Water has 18 billion pounds of debt and needs temporary nationalisation in order to keep the taps running in the event of a financial collapse.

The public is angry at the privatised water sector in the country, which they blame for polluting the rivers with sewage. The government is focused on reforming this sector and wants Thames to be free from administration.

The judge approved the debt lifeline provided by senior creditor. It will provide Thames with an initial amount of 1.5 billion pounds, plus the possibility of another 1.5 billion. This will extend its funding to May 2026. The company had said that it would have been out of money in six weeks without the approval.

However, the new debt package was controversial. The new debt package was controversial. A group of lower ranking creditors were against it. They called its interest rate of 9.75% too expensive.

Thames Water has 16 million customers and despite the rescue package, it still faces multiple challenges in order to survive past 2026.

To avoid millions of fines, it must raise more than 3 billion pounds as new equity and restructure debts. It also needs to improve its infrastructure and its environmental performance.

The price that Thames Water can charge its customers in the next five-year period is a complicating factor for investors.

The regulator said that the company could raise its bills by 35% in this time period, which is less than the 53% increase it claims it needs. The company filed an appeal on February 14, attempting to improve terms.

The rescue package came from a group including Abrdn and Elliott Investment Management in London, M&G, PIMCO, M&G, and Invesco. $1 = 0.7931 pounds (Reporting and editing by Mrigank Dahniwala, Kate Holton and Sam Tobin in London; Yadarisa Shabbong in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)